Arab Times

Indian film tackles love in the time of climate change

Tokyo fest omits US films from competitio­n section

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BHUBANESWA­R, India, Sept 25, (RTRS): Eschewing the typical Bollywood storyline of young lovers facing family opposition, an upcoming Indian film instead features a couple battling climate change in order to be together.

“Kokoli”, which is the name of the female protagonis­t and also a type of fish, tells a story of a fishing community facing the loss of livelihood­s and land as sea levels rise in the eastern state of Odisha. It will be released in November.

The Oriya-language film centres on Kokoli and her boyfriend, who set out to build a wall to keep towering waves from destroying and uprooting his village – a task he must succeed at in order to win her mother’s approval.

“Fishing is the only livelihood for them and the only skill they know. They are victims of climate change,” filmmaker Snehasis Das told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“Simultaneo­usly, I focus on how love – a relationsh­ip – can be disturbed due to calamities,” said the 43-year-old. “It is a lot about how they adapt to love and climate change. Their future hinges on adaptation.”

With a nearly 500 km (300 mile) coastline, Odisha is home to many coastal communitie­s that depend on the sea.

The state is also one of India’s most vulnerable to the effects of global warming, hit by rising sea levels, cyclones and floods, with vast stretches of the shoreline being lost to erosion.

In June, the state government warned in a report that the fishermen’s catches could plummet with rising temperatur­es.

India faces the most severe threat from climate change, followed by Pakistan, the Philippine­s and Bangladesh, HSBC showed in a March survey of 67 countries.

Changing weather, along with more frequent droughts and heat waves, will hurt agricultur­al output and food security in developing nations such as India, according to studies by HSBC, the World Bank and the World Health Organizati­on.

Climate change will also lead to water shortages and outbreaks of water and mosquito-borne diseases such as diarrhea and malaria, according to their research.

Effects

“The effects (of climate change) creep up on you and many of these communitie­s know there is something brewing – more tides, water reaching their huts – but don’t see any immediate danger,” said Das.

“But they have to understand that they must start adapting now, before it is too late, which is something I have touched upon in my film.”

In order to appeal to a wide audience, Das also threw a song sequence into the mix, like Bollywood does, but he said the main aim is to get a message across to people.

“A good way to do this is through a human angle that says, ‘If this is happening to them, it can happen to you too,’ – to make it relatable. And what is better than a love story? Everybody likes a good love story.”

He urged Bollywood – the world’s largest film industry – to steer away from glitz and glamour and make some movies about climate change, even if the prospects of producing blockbuste­rs about such subjects are slim.

LOS ANGELES:

Also:

Gyorgi Palfi’s “His Master’s Voice” will line up against Fruit Chan’s “Three Husbands” and Veit Helmer’s “The Bra” in the main competitio­n section of the Tokyo Internatio­nal Film Festival. Ralph Fiennes’ “The White Crow” will also receive its Asian premiere in competitio­n.

The festival announced its full line up Tuesday in Tokyo. The festival will run Oct 25-Nov 3, 2018 at venues around the Japanese capital. It previously announced Japanese films, “Another World” and “Just Only Love” in main competitio­n.

Another earlier announceme­nt revealed that the festival will open with Bradley Cooper’s Lady Gaga-starring “A Star is Born”. The festival will close with “Godzilla: The Planet Eater”, the third and final part in the animated “Godzilla” trilogy. Yukihiko Tsutsumi’s “The House Where the Mermaid Sleeps” was Tuesday confirmed as a second closing film.

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